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When does photography become manipulation?

Fri Apr 13, 2007, 2:30 AM

Gilad's Journal




I think that the digital era of photography brought this question into a whole new level, but this question was always around. Manipulating photography was always around, and Andy Warhol did his Monroe colored portraits long before Adobe came up with Photoshop. Manipulation was done all the time in Fashion adds, where skin flaws were covered with colors and journalistic manipulation tried to illustrate images, when no documentation was available.

So why is the issue of manipulation becoming so controversial these days more than ever before?

Well, these are the problems in my opinion:
1. The fact that digital photography is much more common than what photography was and now days the “tools of the trade” are so easily spread and used, makes the border between to professionals and armatures practically invisible. Many professionals in an attempt to create that border are trying to get the editing tools out of the equation so real photography would be considered a profession, when editing makes it something else. And I agree.
2. It is so damn easier than it use to be. Practically every 12 years old kid can make a photo manipulation it use to take hours of dark room and a lot of knowledge just a few years ago. Photography is a skill that becomes irrelevant when all is needed is a few minutes with Photoshop, and so a set of rules of what is the line between photography and manipulation has to be drawn.
3. Photography is slowly loosing it’s respected place as an authentic art form, and so in order to prevent that it is needed to state what is really a “photograph”, and on the other hand, when it can’t be considered a plain photo anymore.
4. Dishonesty. Photographers that are not satisfied with their technique, gear or the plain results add a lot of manipulation to try and make this look better, and end up with a while different result than the photograph. Even fabrication of the truth is an important moral question in that regard. When it is present it as photography, others feel cheated to. If the artist (and not photographer) would be honest and present it as digital art, or photo manipulation then probably all be clear but at the point people recognize the dishonesty that creates the controversy.


The answer:
1. Reuters (world leading news and media agency) has stated a set of rules of what is the limit of the use of photoshop  [link] The say very clearly what is the ground rule for a photograph to still be a photograph, and I tend to agree. Read the article, but just to give you a preview –
ALLOWED: Cropping, Adjustment of Levels to histogram limits, Minor color correction, Sharpening, Careful use of lasso tool, Subtle use of burn tool, Adjustment of highlights and shadows, Eye dropper to check/set gray
NOT ALLOWED: Additions or deletions to image, Cloning & Healing tool (except dust), Airbrush, brush, paint, Selective area sharpening, Excessive lightening/darkening, Excessive color tone change, Auto levels, Blurring, Eraser tool, Quick Mask, In-camera sharpening, In-camera saturation styles.
Now, you have to understand that the rules applied of photo journalism are not exactly the same as art photography. In photojournalism the rules are harsh case the artistic side of the photograph is not important and it’s only the authentic photograph that is important. In art these rules can be bend a bit in my opinion (like I do use Auto levels on my photographs) but I think that as ground rules – these are right.
2. My philosophy is simple, the same “manipulation” that was once accepted as a part of photography, the one you did in the “Dark room” is still a part of photography. The second you start doing things that were once excessive, they still are. Play with levels, convert to B&W or sepia, sharpen it up, change contrast and tone, but that’s it.
If you start mixing a few photos together, change selective parts in the picture, clone out people or change the “weather” you are turning the photograph into something that shouldn’t be called a photograph.
3. Be honest. Don’t say it’s a photograph if you know you have changed it so much it looks nothing like the original. If the result is good people will still like it if you state it’s manipulated. It’s ok, just a different art form.


To conclude my thoughts on this matter, I think that in time it will be easier to see the border between photography and manipulation and we are going through a phase. Or at least I hope so. If we all give extra effort to preserving the ethics on this matter we will help preserve photography as art.


Now, I invite you to take a look with me, at 10 of my favorites Under my weekly spotlight


Gilad's Journal


A Great scene.
I can imagine this scene in real life, and it actually crack me up :)


Total views up to now: 148
Total Favorites up to now: 17


Gilad's Journal


Very impressive B&W shot, fulled with details and drama.
It seems there is not very much in this subject, but it still works like a hammer on a nail. Brilliant.


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Gilad's Journal


Strong expression.
A soldier is returning from a long day carrying the weight of his day in his hands. The perspective and depth, and the overall mood makes it work.


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Gilad's Journal


Beautiful abstract. Maybe it's not an original picture of a staircase, but very well done.


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Gilad's Journal


Another great abstract. Great photograpic vision to see this frame and capture it.


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Gilad's Journal


And while the subject of abstacts, here is another beautiful and colorful one. Artistic street photography. My favourite.


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Gilad's Journal


And another. Very simple and very creative.


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Gilad's Journal


There is not one sole that sees thins and doesn't understand the expression and symbol. It's simple and effective, and makes me want to hug my son (Oh wait, I am...)


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Gilad's Journal


The footprints leading away into the horizon... It look so beautiful here. Great colors and composition.


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Gilad's Journal


Well, the lonely tree is nothing new, but every now and again you see a picture of one makes you want to go out and be a photographer. The clarity and the the way the clouds fit in the composition. Amazing piece. Bravo!


Total views up to now: 378
Total Favorites up to now: 61




Gilad's Journal



It's amazing to see how much beauty and quality is passed un-noticed here in all one week. I hope that more great work will get noticed here. It's up to us. Use the comments favorites power to support the un-noticed.

Keep supporting!



*****

Gilad's Journal

1. Art is all about expression

2. About Photography, and Israel too

3. DA Thoughts

4. Infra Red

5. Let me shed some Light

6. All the Info you can probably get on me – The BTL with G

7. Listen to "One Day"

8. About freedom of speech and ethics

9. A Different Look At Israel / Part 3, and part 4

10. Where you can download the "A Different Look At Israel" presentations.

11. Summing up 3 years of being a DeviantArt member

12. Summing up what I had to say in 2006

13. Special Interview - An Eye On The World

14. Tips on Shooting indoors

15. Tips on recommended filters

16. Using build in flash

17. Keep your pixels yours

18. About making money in photography

19. Do you know how to get exposure?



If you didn't hear about the wonderful project of `ArtistsForCharity now its the time! go, share, and help.

These are five prints of my work, I gave to the project so far:
and and and and


Yours, G




If you don't want to read all this Bla Bla Bla, you can simply download the "A Different Look At Israel" presentations here.


  • Mood: Adoration

Devious Comments

:iconkillertoothbrush:
yeah... pretty much what +cweeks said last week. :)

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:iconfrenetikfred:
Great journal entry. It makes things clearer and point the things to where they need to be. Honestly A a few days ago I tried some PS work in order to see what's the result, and it's definitely so far that a real work with filters and stuff. It lacks life ! I totally agree with you on that point but I think it's hard to clean up photography, I don't think I'm enoughly proud to tell what photography is, and moreover, maybe I don't know what it is !

You selected great shots once again !

--
My blog | My Gallery
:iconvard66:
Hear hear. Borders only, unless it's a portrait and someone wants a spot removed from it.

--
Vard
:iconthehoodedronin:
I agree wholeheartedly. I am a fan of both traditional and digital photography, but I feel that traditional photography has lost a lot of common respect lately due to the way of manipulations. I've spent a lot of time and hard work in the darkroom, and while some alterations are alright, others are going too far to still call it a photograph and start to cross the line into a seperate category of art. This is just my opinion though.

--
"What else is love but understanding and rejoicing in the fact that another person lives, acts, and experiences otherwise than we do…?"
-Friedrich Nietzsche
:iconkillertoothbrush:
hehe, yeah. Good to get it out there to as many people as possible though. :)

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Millions of people...
One passion...
deviantART.com
:icongmmorris:
In general I agree completly, but we must not forget that we used to do many of these things in our bathroom-darkrooms!

We used to add selective vignetting around portraits to make the subject stand out- and that wasn't considered manipulation, but rather a valid photographic tool.

--
Have you seen what I've been up to? ~[link]
Or my Flickr through life? +[link]
:iconluke-ro:
Very interesting Journal, both about the issue of photomanipulation and your features. About the first i tend to agree with you. Thanks for another great journal! :)

--
"Where the spirit does not work with the hand, there is no art." -- Leonardo da Vinci.
:icongilad:
I know, and that why I say that these days we have to take care of the borders much more then we use to. Back then it was all "in the game" since very few did it, and these days - no borders at all for everybody. We need to make it more clear.

--
My latest piece
A different Look At Israel

What part of "A Different look at Israel" is your favorite? 

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Shoutbox

~tiwlip:icontiwlip:
Anyway , I'm glad you managed to do it . I really like all your pictures .It's like your photographs have life in them. Sorry about my bad english
Thu Jul 16, 2009, 10:10 AM
~tiwlip:icontiwlip:
I really like your idea of making this project.I thought about it myself:doing a powerpoint presentation about Romania(the country where I live in)so the people can see the beauty of it.Sadly I can be so lazy sometimes.
Thu Jul 16, 2009, 10:06 AM
~jumpingllamabeans:iconjumpingllamabeans:
you must be the BEST photographer on DA and possibly anywhere in the WORLD! i love how you took the effort to put together tutorials and tips. it'd be great if you'd be willing to teach me! afterall, i'm only 15 and i want photography to be my kind of art
Sat Jun 13, 2009, 1:42 PM
~Mickyfin02:iconMickyfin02:
Hi Gilad. I am a bit new to photography and this site. I really like your photos. I would like it if you wouldn't mind swinging over my way and have a look at my photos and may give me a tip or two. thank you.
Fri May 1, 2009, 9:22 AM
*billyunderscorebwa:iconbillyunderscorebwa:
Greetings from the US :)
Tue Apr 28, 2009, 1:00 PM
~suericfan:iconsuericfan:
you are so awesome! <3 :glomp:
Tue Apr 28, 2009, 6:42 AM
~Thowe:iconThowe:
SHOUT SHOUT LET IT ALL OUT
Thu Apr 23, 2009, 8:31 AM
~Ebethdevine:iconEbethdevine:
I'm not an artist or photographer myself. I'm your average woman with an appreciation for art that is moving and has depth. I just looked through your entire gallery, and was moved by your gift. How amazing that you bring such beauty to even the dark.
Fri Apr 17, 2009, 8:20 PM
=wasp2:iconwasp2:
:nod:
Mon Jan 19, 2009, 8:32 AM
~johannmetzger:iconjohannmetzger:
Great journal, thanks!
Fri Jan 2, 2009, 12:21 AM

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